Michael Shiloh writes:
> select a portion of text in something (e.g. mail)
> magic shortcut OPENS SELECTION IN A VI SESSION
> edit to my hearts content
> close vi which writes the vi buffer back to the select buffer
> paste result in final destination
Install the xclip program, then do something like this:
xclip -out -selection primary >/tmp/clip; vi /tmp/clip; xclip -in -selection primary < /tmp/clip
Of course, you'd make that an alias if you wanted to do it very often.
My vim adds a newline to files that don't initially have one, so
if yours does too (I'm fairly sure that's a configuration option)
you'd probably want to change that or call vi with a special
config file.
I've had some problems with xclip on multi-line selections, and
I ended up writing a Python program to use instead. My python
program eliminates newlines so you don't want to use it verbatim,
but if you have any problems with multi-line selections you might
want to consider an option like that -- and then you could call
vi from the same script.
http://shallowsky.com/blog/linux/open-selection-in-browser.html
...Akkana